All Unionized and Nowhere to Go

Decree 97 of November 25, 2012 went
virtually unnoticed in the political upheaval following President Morsi’s
November 22 constitutional declaration which granted him almost dictatorial
powers. Decree 97 amended the law regulating trade unions and removed all
office holders of the state-sponsored Egyptian Federation of Trade Unions
(ETUF) over 60 years old. They are to be replaced by candidates who received
the second-largest vote tally in the 2006 national union elections—widely
considered exceptionally corrupt. In August 2011, the Ministry of Manpower and
Migration certified their invalidation and dissolved the ETUF’s executive
board.The decree also authorizes Minister of
Manpower and Migration Khalid al-Azhari of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and
Justice Party to appoint replacements to vacant trade union offices if no
second-place candidate exists. State security officials banned thousands of
opposition trade unionists from running in 2006, so hundreds of candidates ran
unopposed. Thus, as many as 150 Muslim Brothers could be appointed to posts in
ETUF’s twenty-four national sector unions, while fourteen of twenty-four
executive board members will be sacked.Additionally, Mubarak regime stalwart
ETUF President Ahmad ‘Abd al-Zahir was replaced by al-Gibali al-Maraghi—a
younger member of the old guard—and Muslim Brother Yusri Bayyumi became ETUF
treasurer. Only three advocates of independent trade unionism remain on the
executive board. On December 24, President Morsi appointed al-Maraghi to the
Shura Council, the upper house of parliament, which many suspect was a reward
for working with the Brotherhood.Decree 97 also extends the terms of
incumbent union office-holders for six months or until the next ETUF elections
(whichever comes first). Muslim Brothers and ETUF old guard figures will
supervise those elections and likely confirm their joint control over the
organization. This is characteristic of the Muslim Brotherhood’s recent
political practice. Rather than reform institutions and power centers of the
Mubarak regime, it has sought to extend its control over them. But as in other
spheres, they do not have a concrete program or enough trained personnel to
manage ETUF. Therefore, they are dividing control of the organization with
Mubarak era figures. Their common interest is first and foremost
bureaucratic—to maintain their positions. The Brothers also seek to limit the
extent of independent trade unionism, as it constitutes a potential opposition
to their free market ideology.Almost a thousand new unions
independent of ETUF have been established since the January 25, 2011 uprising
against the Mubarak regime. Many of them have joined one of the two new union
federations—the Egyptian Federation of Independent Trade Unions or the Egyptian
Democratic Labor Congress. The federations and many of their constituent unions
are weak in resources and organizational capacity—in part because Egypt had no
experience with democratic trade unionism between the early 1950s and 2011.
However, the existence of these federations and the high-profile struggles of
many of their affiliated unions—municipal real estate tax assessors; Cairo bus
and Metro workers; teachers; iron, steel, and ceramics workers; Ain Sokhna port
workers—have put the demands for democratic trade unionism, workers freedom of
association, and the right to bargain collectively on the political agenda. The
International Labor Organization and the International Trade Union
Confederation have supported these goals. Yet Egypt routinely flouts ILO
conventions affirming these principles that it ratified long ago.Independent trade unionists strongly
oppose Decree 97. On November 28 the Center for Trade Union and Workers
Services (CTUWS) held a conference under the slogan, “No to the
“Brotherhoodization of the Unions.” Its General Coordinator Kamal Abbas
addressed the gathering and said, “We reject Morsi’s law, not because we defend
those over sixty, but because the organizational rules do not permit anyone but
corrupt people to take their place.”During the week between the two rounds
of the referendum on Egypt’s newly adopted constitution (December 15-22) three
large, strategic groups of industrial workers went on strike. Two of them
quickly won their main demands. The Eastern Tobacco Company, a public sector
firm headquartered in Giza, holds the monopoly on local cigarette production.
Its thirteen thousand workers secured restoration of their production
incentives, which had been cut because the company reduced its output
anticipating new cigarette taxes. Similarly, eight thousand workers at the
public-sector Egyptian Aluminum Company in Nag Hammadi secured restoration of
profit-sharing bonuses which had been cut from 12 months to 45 days’ basic pay.Belying the common distinction between
“political” and “economic” demands, the Eastern Tobacco workers also demanded that
the company’s CEO (a Mubarak-era appointee) be removed for corruption. An
interim CEO was appointed and their charges will be investigated. Moreover,
Minister of Investment Usama Salih, a technocrat who occupied high positions in
the Mubarak era, personally intervened in both strikes and directed that the
workers’ demands be met. It will cost the state treasury EGP70 million to meet
the aluminum workers’ demands, and millions more for the tobacco workers.Despite these victories, though, the
future of independent trade unions and the workers’ movement under the new
constitution is uncertain. Article 52 states: “The freedom to form syndicates,
unions, and cooperatives is a right guaranteed by law.” But the only existing
law is Law 35 of 1976, which gives ETUF a monopoly on the organization of trade
unions. The article also permits the dissolution of entire unions and their
executive boards by judicial order. Articles 63 and 70 appear to permit certain
forms of forced and child labor that would violate ILO conventions (Nos. 29,
105, 138, and 182) that Egypt has ratified.Former Minister of Manpower and
Migration Dr. Ahmad Burai resigned in protest in November 2011 over the Supreme
Council of the Armed Forces’ refusal to allow the cabinet to enact the “Trade
Union Freedoms” law his ministry had drafted with input from independent
unions. On December 22 al-Burai told the daily al-Shorouk that the constitution
violates ILO conventions (Nos. 87 and 98) that Egypt has ratified which
guarantee workers freedom of association and the right to bargain collectively.
The ILO might once again place Egypt on the “black list”—as the ILO’s list of
“special cases” is dubbed by Egyptian advocates of democratic trade unionism.There were nearly 1,400 strikes and
other labor protests in 2011. According to the Egyptian Center for Economic and
Social Rights, there were 3,150 collective workers’ actions in the eight months
of 2012 for which they compiled statistics. This continuing social movement has
the potential to block the plan to revive Egypt’s stalling economy adopted in
principle by Egyptian and International Monetary Fund technocrats in November
2011. Implementation of the agreement would bring Egypt a $4.8 billion IMF loan
and potentially up to $5 billion in aid from the European Union—as well as $1.4
billion in foreign aid and financial guarantees from the United States (in
addition to the annual $1.3 billion in military aid). However, it will result
in higher prices, lower government subsidies for consumer and producer goods,
new sales taxes, and cuts to the number of state employees. This austerity
program would further exacerbate unemployment (now officially at 12 percent)
and inflation (currently about 10 percent per annum).Consequently, implementation was suspended
after the unexpected massive opposition to Morsi’s November 22 constitutional
declaration. The Egyptian president had promised that there was “no
conditionality” attached to the IMF loan, despite the well-known history of
such conditions in Egypt and elsewhere. He does not have a mandate to implement
an austerity program that will be both unpopular and very likely to increase
the number of strikes and worker protests.In the arena of trade unionism and
labor relations—as in the broader political and economic arena—Egypt’s future
is uncertain. Industrial workers comprise one of the sectors that solidly, but
certainly not unanimously, opposed the new constitution. In addition, large
numbers of previously unpoliticized “couch potatoes” participated in militant
demonstrations against Morsi’s November 22 decree and the proposed
constitution.Workers have not been a strong factor
in the post-Mubarak national political arena. Some components of the National
Salvation Front (NSF) formed to oppose the constitution claim to represent
workers’ interests. But its leading figures have done little to build
grassroots support among workers. Many NSF supporters hope the front will
contest the upcoming parliamentary elections as a unified bloc. This could
create a different balance of forces than in the overwhelmingly Islamist first
post-Mubarak parliament. In that case, the contest over Egypt’s future would
take place in the parliament as well as in streets and workplaces. If not,
streets and workplaces will continue as they have for the past two years.Joel
Beinin is the Donald J. McLachlan Professor of History and a professor of
Middle East history at Stanford University. This article is based on the press
and interviews conducted in Cairo in December 2012. Thanks to Dina Bishara and
Ahmad Shokr for their insightful conversation and comments.This article is reprinted with
permission from Sada.It can be accessed
online at:
http://carnegieendowment.org/2013/01/08/all-unionized-and-nowhere-to-go/f04r